638 research outputs found
Charged Particle Dynamics in the Field of a Slowly Rotating Compact Star
We study the dynamics of a charged particle in the field of a slowly rotating
compact star in the gravitoelectromagnetic approximation to the geodesic
equation . The star is assumed to be surrounded by an ideal, highly conducting
plasma (taken as a magnetohydrodynamic fluid) with a stationary, axially
symmetric electromagnetic field. The general relativistic Maxwell equations are
solved to obtain the effects of the background spacetime on the electromagnetic
field in the linearized Kerr spacetime. The equations of motion are then set up
and solved numerically to incorporate the gravitational as well as the
electromagnetic effects. The analysis shows that in the slow rotation
approximation the frame dragging effects on the electromagnetic field are
absent. However the particle is directly effected by the rotating gravitational
source such that close to the star the gravitational and electromagnetic field
produce contrary effects on the particle's trajectory.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures in B & W PostScript Forma
Electronic correlations in vanadium chalcogenides: BaVSe3 versus BaVS3
Albeit structurally and electronically very similar, at low temperature the
quasi-one-dimensional vanadium sulfide BaVS3 shows a metal-to-insulator
transition via the appearance of a charge-density-wave state, while BaVSe3
apparently remains metallic down to zero temperature. This different behavior
upon cooling is studied by means of density functional theory and its
combination with the dynamical mean-field theory and the rotationally-invariant
slave-boson method. We reveal several subtle differences between these
chalcogenides that provide indications for the deviant behavior of BaVSe3 at
low temperature. In this regard, a smaller Hubbard U in line with an increased
relevance of the Hund's exchange J plays a vital role.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures, published versio
The prismatic Sigma 3 (10-10) twin bounday in alpha-Al2O3 investigated by density functional theory and transmission electron microscopy
The microscopic structure of a prismatic twin
boundary in \aal2o3 is characterized theoretically by ab-initio
local-density-functional theory, and experimentally by spatial-resolution
electron energy-loss spectroscopy in a scanning transmission electron
microscope (STEM), measuring energy-loss near-edge structures (ELNES) of the
oxygen -ionization edge. Theoretically, two distinct microscopic variants
for this twin interface with low interface energies are derived and analysed.
Experimentally, it is demonstrated that the spatial and energetical resolutions
of present high-performance STEM instruments are insufficient to discriminate
the subtle differences of the two proposed interface variants. It is predicted
that for the currently developed next generation of analytical electron
microscopes the prismatic twin interface will provide a promising benchmark
case to demonstrate the achievement of ELNES with spatial resolution of
individual atom columns
Cavity-enhanced superradiant Rayleigh scattering with ultra-cold and Bose-Einstein condensed atoms
We report on the observation of collective atomic recoil lasing and
superradiant Rayleigh scattering with ultracold and Bose-Einstein condensed
atoms in an optical ring cavity. Both phenomena are based on instabilities
evoked by the collective interaction of light with cold atomic gases. This
publication clarifies the link between the two effects. The observation of
superradiant behavior with thermal clouds as hot as several tens of
proves that the phenomena are driven by the cooperative
dynamics of the atoms, which is strongly enhanced by the presence of the ring
cavity.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figure
The EVN view of the highly variable TeV active galaxy IC 310
Very-high-energy -ray observations of the active galaxy IC 310 with
the MAGIC telescopes have revealed fast variability with doubling time scales
of less than 4.8min. This implies that the emission region in IC 310 is smaller
than 20% of the gravitational radius of the central supermassive black hole
with a mass of , which poses serious questions on the
emission mechanism and classification of this enigmatic object. We report on
the first quasi-simultaneous multi-frequency VLBI observations of IC 310
conducted with the EVN. We find a blazar-like one-sided core-jet structure on
parsec scales, constraining the inclination angle to be less than but very small angles are excluded to limit the de-projected length
of the large-scale radio jet.Comment: 4 pages, proceedings of the 12th European VLBI Network Symposium and
Users Meeting - EVN 2014, 7-10 October 2014, Cagliari, Italy. Published
online in PoS, ID.10
Resonator-Enhanced Optical Dipole Trap for Fermionic Lithium Atoms
We demonstrate a novel optical dipole trap which is based on the enhancement
of the optical power density of a Nd:YAG laser beam in a resonator. The trap is
particularly suited for experiments with ultracold gases, as it combines a
potential depth of order 1 mK with storage times of several tens of seconds. We
study the interactions in a gas of fermionic lithium atoms in our trap and
observe the influence of spin-changing collisions and off-resonant photon
scattering. A key element in reaching long storage times is an ultra-low noise
laser. The dependence of the storage time on laser noise is investigated.Comment: 4 pages 3 figures Revised 17.07.2001; Corrected calibration of noise
measm
Distinct transcription kinetics of pluripotent cell states
Mouse embryonic stem cells (mESCs) can adopt naïve, ground, and paused pluripotent states that give rise to unique transcriptomes. Here, we use transient transcriptome sequencing (TT-seq) to define both coding and non-coding transcription units (TUs) in these three pluripotent states and combine TT-seq with RNA polymerase II occupancy profiling to unravel the kinetics of RNA metabolism genome-wide. Compared to the naïve state (serum), RNA synthesis and turnover rates are globally reduced in the ground state (2i) and the paused state (mTORi). The global reduction in RNA synthesis goes along with a genome-wide decrease of polymerase elongation velocity, which is related to epigenomic features and alterations in the Pol II termination window. Our data suggest that transcription activity is the main determinant of steady state mRNA levels in the naïve state and that genome-wide changes in transcription kinetics invoke ground and paused pluripotent states
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